Grenada thanks U.S., celebrates 1983 invasion

Oct. 25, 2013 - 06:00AM
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U.S. Ambassador Larry Palmer, right, and U.S. Marine Corps Gen. John F. Kelly, head of the U.S. Southern Command, second from right, attend a wreath laying ceremony Oct. 25 for the 30th anniversary of the U.S. military intervention at Wilberforce Cemetery in St. George's, Grenada. (Harold Quash / AP)

Correction:

In a story Oct. 25 about the 30th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Grenada, The Associated Press reported erroneously that everyone was killed in a multiple helicopter crash. The U.S. Southern Command says three U.S. Army rangers died and five were seriously injured. The story has been corrected.

ST. GEORGE’S, GRENADA — The planes began flying over Grenada around dawn, their low rumble awakening people in the tiny Caribbean island where a military government had seized power days before and executed the prime minister.

More than 7,000 U.S. Marines and Army paratroopers invaded the island to the cheers of Grenadians, who commemorate the 1983 action with a national holiday known as “Thanksgiving Day.” About 100 people in all died during the operation dubbed “Urgent Fury.”

Dozens of U.S. veterans, Grenadians and former U.S. students evacuated from Grenada’s medical school during the operation gathered Friday to celebrate the 30th anniversary of one of the most popular foreign invasions in recent history and what was then the largest U.S. military operation since the Vietnam War.

“The U.S. stemmed the flow of blood, for which we are eternally grateful,” said Grenada Prime Minister Keith Mitchell as he spoke at a Thanksgiving Day church service. “It is because of that we can enjoy democratic principles, which we sometimes take for granted.”

Months before the operation, former President Ronald Reagan had complained about Soviet-Cuban militarization of the Caribbean and expressed worries that a new Cuban-backed 10,000-foot (3,000-meter) runway in Grenada would be used by Soviet military planes.

Then on Oct. 19, 1983, Grenada’s Marxist prime minister Maurice Bishop, three members of his Cabinet and four others were executed by a radical faction of his Cuba-backed party on orders of then-Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard.

Six days later, Reagan sent in U.S. troops, helped by a few hundred Caribbean security forces.

Reagan said the invasion was necessary to protect the lives of the more than 600 U.S. students at St. George’s University School of Medicine, but the U.N. and countries including Britain and Canada accused the U.S. of violating international law.

The reasons for the invasion were groundless, said Stephen Zunes, professor of politics and international studies at the University of San Francisco.

“The coup gave us the excuse, and because the people of the island where so shell-shocked and outraged at what had been done, they welcomed in large part the U.S. invasion that they would have probably fought off had it taken place while Bishop was still in power,” he said.

Zunes noted the Reagan administration had been trying to undermine Bishop’s regime, and said the invasion molded Grenada’s political and economic future, turning it from socialism to more capitalist lines.

Charles Modica, the medical university’s chancellor, said he had polled students and found that some 90 percent did not want to be evacuated.

“I had a very negative reaction,” he said of the invasion. But his opinion softened when he saw how people responded.

“Thanksgiving Day here is more meaningful than you’ll ever know,” he said. “You have to be here to recognize how important it is to people.”

In the first few hours of the invasion, dozens of military personnel jumped out of planes with instructions to evacuate students.

“We weren’t supposed to be on the island any more than a few hours,” recalled retired U.S. Army Sgt. Maj. Scott Breasseale. “But we all know things don’t go how they’re supposed to once the first gun is fired or if intelligence changes.”

Dr. Robert Jordan, senior associate dean of basic sciences, had climbed to the roof of a house to watch the aircraft come in.

“I thought it was some sort of exercise,” he said. “It’s like being in a very large 3D theater ... I watched a Cobra helicopter get shot down. That’s when I realized this was really real.”

Jordan and some 30 students took cover in the two-bedroom apartment of Assistant Dean C.V. Rao and placed mattresses around the sliding doors as the fighting continued.

“There was apprehension ... You don’t know what was happening,” Jordan said. “We also made it into a small party. We had some rum left. It was like a hurricane party.”

He and Rao convinced a school worker to find a bus and take students to the university, where they awaited U.S. forces.

“Everyone was lying on the floor, face down. Then the helicopters arrived with U.S. Marines,” Rao said. “They opened the doors and said, ‘We are the rescue mission.’”

Breasseale said the highlight of the invasion for him was watching students board the helicopters.

“I saw how happy they were and the hugs they were giving each other,” he said. “I felt so much pride.”

The worst for Breasseale came on the third day of the invasion: He was in one of four helicopters leading the pack, and three crashed behind him as they landed. The U.S. Southern Command said three U.S. Armyrangers were killed and five were seriously injured.

“We flew into a very harsh situation,” he said. “There was some enemy fire, some pilot error, some tactical decisions that were probably not the best ... It’s something I’m going to carry for the rest of my life.”

Breasseale said he planned to visit the place where the fatal crashes occurred. It was his first time back in Grenada since the invasion, and he wanted to pay tribute to those who died.